San Antonio Express-News

O’Brien out as coach, GM

Desiring ‘different direction’ after 0-4 start, McNair elevates Crennel with interim tag

- By John McClain STAFF WRITER

HOUSTON — After beginning the season with an 0-4 record for the first time since 2008, the Houston Texans on Monday fired Bill O’Brien as head coach and general manager.

The Texans’ most recent loss, 31-23 to the Minnesota Vikings at NRG Stadium on Sunday, convinced chairman and chief executive officer Cal McNair the team

was going in the wrong direction with O’Brien, who was fired four games into his seventh season.

“I don’t like to do that, because you grow to like people you work with, and I like Bill,” McNair said. “But I think you have to put aside personal feelings when you want

to go in a different direction, and that’s what I did.”

McNair promoted associate head coach Romeo Crennel, 73, to interim coach to replace O’Brien for the last 12 games. Crennel, who is recognized as one of the most successful defensive coordinato­rs in NFL history, has head coaching experience at Cleveland and Kansas City.

Crennel, who earned five Super Bowl rings as an assistant coach with the New York Giants and New England Patriots, came to Houston with O’Brien in 2014 to run the team’s defense.

“That was an easy decision,” McNair said. “I’ve gotten to know Romeo, and he’s a great guy and a wonderful coach. The players really love Romeo. I believe they’ll rally around him.”

In his first six seasons, O’Brien guided the Texans to four AFC South titles and two playoff victories, but they couldn’t get beyond the divisional round of the postseason.

In 2019, the Texans finished10-6, won the division, defeated Buffalo in a wildcard playoff game but lost in the divisional round at Kansas City, where they blew a 24-0 lead and fell 51-31.

“It’s a bottom-line business, and we weren’t able to get it to where we needed to get it,” O’Brien said in a Zoom conference call. “I understand we fell short in terms of taking this team further in the playoffs.

“I leave knowing that myself and this staff gave everything this organizati­on deserved and more. We worked very, very hard to try to get this to a place where it could be a championsh­ip program. We just didn’t get it done.”

Promoting Crennel is the only change McNair made Monday. Jack Easterby, the Texans’ executive vice president of football operations who worked closely with O’Brien, will oversee the football side of the organizati­on. Offensive coordinato­r Tim Kelly and defensive coordinato­r Anthony Weaver will retain their current responsibi­lities.

O’Brien was fired because the Texans got off a disastrous start with losses to Kansas City, Baltimore, Pittsburgh and Minnesota.

McNair wasn’t happy with the 0-3 start but thought the Texans could earn their first victory against Minnesota, another team that was winless after three games. Another lackadaisi­cal performanc­e on offense and defense caused McNair to make the decision Monday rather than take a chance the Texans would lose to Jacksonvil­le, a team that brings a three-game losing streak to NRG Stadium on Sunday.

“I did this now because there’s a lot of the season left, and I wanted to take a chance that we can win some games,” McNair said. “We want to win. We’re going to focus on getting ready to play Jacksonvil­le.”

O’Brien followed Dom Capers and Gary Kubiak as the only head coaches in the Texans’ 19-year history. He was put in charge of personnel decisions after McNair fired general manager Brian Gaine in June 2019.

After last season, McNair gave O’Brien the additional title of general manager.

“Bill may have been the hardest-working coach in the league — the first one here and the last to leave,” McNair said. “He put his heart and soul into his job, but I just thought this was the right time to make a change.”

After getting final say on personnel decisions, O’Brien made three controvers­ial trades. He shipped outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney to Seattle when the Texans couldn’t agree to a new contract with him. He acquired offensive tackle Laremy Tunsil and wide receiver Kenny Stills from Miami for a first-round draft choice in 2020 and first- and second-round picks in 2021.

Then, in a trade that caused him to get ridiculed locally and nationally, O’Brien dealt wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins to Arizona for running back David Johnson, a 2020 secondroun­d draft choice the Texans used on defensive tackle Ross Blacklock, and a 2021 fourth-round pick.

Without Hopkins, one of the NFL’s best receivers and quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson’s favorite target, the Texans’ offense has looked out of sync all season.

“When we lost to Minnesota — a game we had a chance to win — I knew something like this could happen,” O’Brien said..”

 ?? Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er ?? Bill O'Brien walks off the field at NRG Stadium after Houston remained winless with a 31-23 loss Sunday to Minnesota.
Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er Bill O'Brien walks off the field at NRG Stadium after Houston remained winless with a 31-23 loss Sunday to Minnesota.
 ?? Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er ?? Little did these Texans fans on Sunday know that their wish would actually be granted the next day.
Brett Coomer / Staff photograph­er Little did these Texans fans on Sunday know that their wish would actually be granted the next day.

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